Can I File a Personal Chapter 7 If I Am a Partner in an LLC?

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You can file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the same as any other person, even if you are a partner (known as a "member") in a limited liability company (LLC). However, filing for personal bankruptcy will affect your LLC ownership. State laws typically require that the bankrupt member be disassociated from the LLC. Each state regulates LLCs differently, but some have adopted the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, passed in 2006 by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and recommended for adoption by all states.

LLC Management

An operating agreement signed by all LLC members details their rights and responsibilities. The LLC is a hybrid business form, combining advantages of a corporate structure and a general partnership. A corporation insulates its shareholders from personal liability, just as the LLC protects its members from personal liability. However, a corporate shareholder may be subject to double taxation: the corporation is taxed and the shareholder is also taxed on dividends received. As in a general partnership, LLC members pay tax on income they receive. No income tax is assessed against the company itself.

Legal Requirements for an Individual Bankruptcy

Any person may file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, seeking protection from creditors. The Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee is appointed to administer the bankruptcy by collecting and liquidating the assets of the debtor. Among the assets that could be seized by the Chapter 7 trustee is any LLC ownership interest of the debtor. If the bankruptcy trustee takes over the disassociated member's interest, he then stands in the shoes of the expelled member, assuming the former member's LLC rights and responsibilities specified in the operating agreement.

Member Disassociation

State laws, following the model uniform LLC law, require that a LLC member be automatically disassociated from the LLC when he files bankruptcy. By automatic disassociation, the bankruptcy trustee will not be able to include the member's LLC ownership in the assets to be liquidated. A result of this disassociation, depending on the exact language of the operating agreement, is that other LLC members have the automatic right to purchase the interest of the bankrupt LLC member.

Preset Mandatory Buyout Provisions

The operating agreement may fix the process to be followed by the other members when purchasing the disassociated member's interest, such as finding its value by independent appraisal. An appraisal may not be necessary if the operating agreement includes a mandatory price at which the interest must be purchased. Depending on the success of the LLC, the mandatory price may cause a significant loss for the member declaring bankruptcy. No matter the price at which the member's interest is purchased, the disassociated member is still responsible for any debts owed to the LLC.

About the Author

Timothy Mucciante has worked as a lawyer and business consultant, and has been writing professionally since 1981. His writing has appeared in the "Michigan Bar Journal" and many corporate publications. Mucciante holds both a Bachelor of Arts in political science from Michigan State University and a Juris Doctor from Michigan State University/Detroit College of Law.

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